KQED Radio
KQED Newssee more
Latest Newscasts:KQEDNPR
Player Sponsored By
upper waypoint

Reducing Food Waste

at
Save ArticleSave Article
Failed to save article

Please try again

 (Getty Images)

Forty percent of food in the U.S. goes uneaten each year, amounting to $165 billion annually. Those facts are hard to swallow in a country where one in six Americans lack a secure food supply. Food is wasted in many ways, but the largest culprit is food left on our restaurant plates, allowed to spoil in our refrigerators, or thrown out in the (often mistaken) notion that it has gone bad. We talk about food waste and ways we can consume more of the food we buy.

Guests:

Dana Gunders, staff scientist at the Natural Resources Defense Council, who co-authored the study on the reality of date labels and how this leads to waste in America

Dana Frasz, founder and executive director of FoodShift, an organization that works to develop long-term sustainable solutions to reduce waste

Sue Sigler, executive director of the California Association of Food Banks

Tara Duggan, staff writer, San Francisco Chronicle; author 'Root to Stalk Cooking; The Art of Using the Whole Vegetable'

Sponsored

lower waypoint
next waypoint
Gaza War Ceasefire Talks Continue as Israel Threatens Rafah InvasionWill the U.S. Really Ban TikTok?California PUC Considers New Fixed Charge for ElectricityOakland’s Leila Mottley on Her Debut Collection of Poetry ‘woke up no light’Alice Wong Redefines ‘Disability Intimacy’ in New AnthologyHow a Massive California Prison Hunger Strike Overhauled Solitary ConfinementHow to Spend this Summer Camping CaliforniaKQED Series ‘Beyond the Menu’ Tells the Backstory of FoodInside Mexico's Clandestine Drug Treatment CentersWhat’s Next for Pro-Palestinian Campus Protests